My Sister Sent Me To The Kitchen, Then Mom’s Will Spoke For Me-kieutrinh

Rebecca’s heel hit the chair before I ever touched it.

The chair slid backward across the hardwood, its legs screaming under the chandelier while my hand hung in the empty air where the chair had been.

“Go to the kitchen,” Rebecca said, lifting her wineglass without looking ashamed.

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Then she smiled in front of my brother, my sister, and the dinner I had cooked for our dead mother.

“Adopted children don’t eat with the real family.”

The words landed harder than the chair.

I looked at the table first, because looking at their faces would have made me remember every smaller version of this moment.

Mom’s china sat under Rebecca’s roast, Ethan’s wine, Natalie’s folded napkin, and the apple pie I had baked from a recipe Mom kept taped inside the pantry door.

I had spent three days cooking that meal because Rebecca called it a memorial dinner, and grief had made me foolish enough to believe she meant it.

The truth was sitting there in silk blouses and expensive watches, laughing at the adopted sister they had turned into unpaid help.

I did not cry.

I walked into the hallway, opened my purse, and touched the thick envelope I had carried for weeks.

Mom had pressed it into my hand three days before she stopped speaking clearly, when Dad was already too weak to sign anything without resting afterward.

“Only when you need it,” she had whispered.

I had hoped I never would.

That night, I needed it.

I came back to the dining room while Ethan was still laughing under his breath and Natalie was pretending to study the rim of her glass.

Rebecca’s smile widened when she saw me, like she thought I had returned to apologize.

I placed the envelope on the china between the serving platter and the candles.

“Mom and Dad left me this,” I said.

Rebecca blinked once.

Ethan leaned forward.

Natalie’s hand went still.

“Call your lawyers,” I said. “We meet Mr. Sullivan tomorrow.”

The laughter died without anyone turning it off.

For most of my life, I had tried to be reasonable about the word adopted.

Harold and Miriam Morgan had brought me home when I was two, and they never once introduced me as anything except their daughter.

Mom and Dad made belonging look easy.

Rebecca was the oldest, and she treated the family like a private club with her name on the door.

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